Adobe Photoshop

The industry-standard pixel and image editor from Adobe, with advanced retouching, compositing, generative AI via Firefly, and full Creative Cloud integration.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Photoshop For?
  2. Layers, Masks & Selections
  3. Generative Fill & Firefly
  4. Camera Raw & Photography Workflow
  5. Neural Filters & Other AI Tools
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Photoshop For?

Adobe Photoshop is the default professional image editor for creative industries. It has been the industry standard for decades and remains the reference point that other image editors are compared against. If you've ever heard someone say "I'll just Photoshop this," the word has become a verb because the product has dominated its category for so long.

Photoshop is built for photographers, retouchers, graphic designers, illustrators, digital artists, compositors, and anyone producing commercial image work. The feature set is deep and wide, covering pixel-level retouching, compositing, colour correction, raw processing, painting, 3D work, and more. Few professional creative tools are as foundational to their industry.

It's a particularly strong fit for working creatives where client delivery formats assume Photoshop compatibility. PSD is the universal interchange format for layered image work — even tools like Affinity Photo and Pixelmator Pro position themselves as PSD-compatible because Photoshop's format is the lingua franca. For anyone collaborating with other creatives or clients, using Photoshop eliminates a compatibility risk.

It's also a fit for users who need the absolute latest features, particularly generative AI. Adobe's Firefly integration is among the most capable in any image editor, and Adobe ships new AI features aggressively. For creators who want to work with cutting-edge tools, Photoshop is often first to get them.

Photoshop is less compelling for casual users who just want to crop photos and adjust exposure. The learning curve is steep, the subscription is ongoing, and simpler tools (Lightroom, Affinity Photo, Pixelmator Pro, Pixlr) cover most casual needs at lower cost or with easier interfaces.

It's also less attractive to users who object to subscription pricing. Adobe switched from perpetual licences to subscription a decade ago and hasn't looked back. For users who want to own their software, Affinity Photo is the main alternative that remains subscription-free.

Layers, Masks & Selections

The layer system is Photoshop's foundational feature and the reason most advanced workflows exist. Layers are how you combine, edit, and adjust image elements without destroying the original pixels.

The layer and selection model is what makes Photoshop feel like Photoshop. Advanced users think in layers the way editors think in tracks — it's the conceptual framework for everything else, and once learned it maps onto an enormous range of creative tasks.

Generative Fill & Firefly

Generative Fill is Photoshop's most-hyped feature of the past few years and has genuinely changed how a lot of retouching and compositing gets done.

Generative Fill has become one of the most-used new features in Photoshop in years. For retouchers, product photographers, and compositors, it replaces hours of manual cloning and patching with a few seconds of generation. The quality isn't perfect — edges sometimes need cleanup and complex subjects can produce odd results — but the time savings are real.

Camera Raw & Photography Workflow

Photoshop pairs with Adobe Camera Raw (ACR) for raw file processing, and with Lightroom Classic / Lightroom for library management. The photography workflow spans all three tools and they share the same underlying colour science.

For professional photographers, the Photoshop + Lightroom combination remains the most widely used workflow in the industry. Alternatives like Capture One, ON1, DxO, and Affinity exist and some are better on specific criteria, but Adobe's integration, file format support, and ubiquity give the Photography Plan the default position.

Neural Filters & Other AI Tools

Beyond Generative Fill, Photoshop includes a family of Neural Filters — AI-powered effects and transformations that use machine learning rather than traditional pixel math.

The Neural Filters are a mixed bag — some are genuinely useful (Skin Smoothing, Harmonisation, Depth Blur) while others feel like experiments. Adobe iterates on them regularly and some filters graduate from beta to mainline features over time. For users willing to experiment, they're a preview of where image editing is going.

Pricing & Plans

PlanPhotoshop Single AppPhotography PlanCreative Cloud All Apps
Price (monthly)~$22.99/mo~$11.99/mo~$59.99/mo
PhotoshopYesYesYes
Lightroom + Lightroom ClassicNoYesYes
Illustrator, InDesign, Premiere Pro, etc.NoNoYes
Cloud storage100 GB20 GB100 GB
Adobe FontsYesYesYes
Firefly creditsStandardStandardHigher
Adobe ExpressIncludedIncludedIncluded

The Photography Plan at around $11.99/month is the best value for most photographers. It includes Photoshop, Lightroom, Lightroom Classic, and 20 GB of cloud storage. The price has remained relatively stable for years and it's what Adobe points photographers at first. A 1 TB storage upgrade is available for an extra few dollars per month for users with heavy cloud sync needs.

Photoshop Single App at around $22.99/month gives you just Photoshop and 100 GB of storage without Lightroom. This makes sense only if you use Camera Raw rather than Lightroom for raw processing and don't care about library management. For most users, the Photography Plan is cheaper and includes more.

Creative Cloud All Apps at around $59.99/month is the full suite — Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Premiere Pro, After Effects, and the rest of Adobe's creative tools. Essential for multi-discipline creators who use more than one Adobe tool, overkill for users who only need image editing.

Student, educator, and team plans have different pricing. Students and teachers get substantial discounts on the All Apps bundle. Business and team plans add centralised billing and admin. For eligible users, the discounts are large enough to meaningfully change the value calculation.

The pricing debate around Photoshop is perennial. Subscription opponents argue you pay forever and never own the software. Adobe's counter is that you always get the latest features, cloud services, and regular updates. Both arguments have merit. If the subscription model bothers you, Affinity Photo is the clearest alternative. If it doesn't, Photoshop remains the tool that most creative workflows are built around.

Adobe Photoshop

Industry-standard image editor with layers, generative fill, Camera Raw, neural filters, and full Creative Cloud integration.

Open Photoshop →